Current:Home > FinanceReview: Marvel's 'Agatha All Along' has a lot of hocus pocus but no magic -Financial Clarity Guides
Review: Marvel's 'Agatha All Along' has a lot of hocus pocus but no magic
View
Date:2025-04-15 14:40:11
The air is crisp and cold, leaves are turning red and the pumpkins are out, which means it's time for some witchy stuff. Where will you get it this year, you may ask?
Well abra cadabra and bippity boppity boo, because Marvel and Disney+ are more than happy to provide you with one powerful sorceress in Agatha Harkness, played by Kathryn Hahn.
You know Agatha, right? She of that catchy tune from 2021's Disney+/Marvel series "WandaVision," with the broach and purple magic and the Emmy nomination? Yes, that one!
Agatha is back with her gorgeous hair, lots of one-liners and an evil laugh, in "Agatha All Along" (streaming Wednesdays, ★★ out of four) a "WandaVision" spinoff with an identity crisis and a host of very talented actors. We're talking Hahn, of course, but also Broadway legend Patti LuPone, Aubrey Plaza, "Saturday Night Live" alum Sasheer Zamata, Debra Jo Rupp and "Heartstopper" teen hunk Joe Locke, just to start. And not one of them seems quite to know what show they're in. But they all seem to be having fun, and it can be contagious. If confusing.
"Agatha" is trying to do too many things at once. Buried deep somewhere is a good horror series about Agatha's journey with real scares and perhaps a mythology that's understandable. But in true Marvel fashion, more and more stuff just keeps getting piled on the base story. A famous actor here. A new song from the "Frozen" writers over there. A full season premiere re-doing "WandaVision" just to start off with everything as confusing as possible.
Need a break? Play the USA TODAY Daily Crossword Puzzle.
Because when we meet Agatha again it is not in her purple-gowned glory, but rather as a messy New Jersey cop trying to solve a murder. What? Slowly − I mean, painfully slowly − it becomes clear what is going on: Agatha is stuck in a TV-show prison of Wanda's (Elizabeth Olsen) creation, the villain's comeuppance from the finale of the first series. With help from a fanboy teen with a mysterious past (Locke) and frenemy witch Rio Vidal (Plaza), Agatha breaks free of her chains, but is instantly pursued by all the powerful witches she's ever wronged.
So she and the teen hatch a plan to go down the "Witches' Road" with a makeshift coven in pursuit of power and glory, which sends them all on an odyssey of magical houses and evil black mud.
But you'd be hard-pressed to understand what "Agatha" is for the first 30 minutes of the series, which are wasted on a parody of HBO's Kate Winslet cop show "Mare of Easttown." It's admittedly funny if you're in on the joke, but it's just so unnecessary. We don't need a whole episode to get from "WandaVision" to "Agatha." Plenty of spinoffs can forge their own path with five minutes or less of exposition and rehashing.
But it feels like the cop show bit is there because creator Jac Schaeffer (also the "WandaVision" scribe) had a fun idea and nobody said no. "Agatha" is in desperate need of editing, even down to how many characters it introduces. The coven witches, played by LuPone, Zamata and Ali Ahn, each come with more backstory than the show has time to get into in its 30-ish minute episodes. It leaves them each with half- or quarter-formed characters that are impossible to like or relate to. Worse, they steal focus and screen time from Agatha herself, who was drawn in far more focus in "WandaVision" than she is here.
The writers seem less interested in rounding out its characters than creating little funhouses destined to become Disney World attractions, a coastal mansion with matching Nancy Meyers-esque costumes in one episode and a 1970s-style recording studio in the next, each nominally a "trial" in the witches' journey down the road but reads more like the set and costume departments wanted to use leftover stuff from other shows.
There are moments when Hahn gets to chew on scenery in all her Agatha glory, and you remember why she was so deliciously malevolent and appealing in "WandaVision." It was only due to Hahn's performance and popularity that "Agatha" came into being at all. One of the most versatile and transformative actors of her generation, she is just so good at playing bad (or really, playing anything a Hollywood script can throw at her). You wonder, given she's the real draw of the show, why she's hidden beneath excess characters and themed costumes.
Maybe all along Agatha was better just as a villain. Or a song.
veryGood! (1327)
Related
- 'Malcolm in the Middle’ to return with new episodes featuring Frankie Muniz
- Why King Charles III Won't Be Seated With Royal Family at Easter Service
- Terrence Shannon Jr. powers Illinois to Elite Eight amid controversy
- Unsung North Dakota State transfer leads Alabama past North Carolina and into the Elite 8
- Jamie Foxx gets stitches after a glass is thrown at him during dinner in Beverly Hills
- USWNT midfielder apologizes for social media posts after Megan Rapinoe calls out 'hate'
- US probes complaints that Ford pickups can downshift without warning, increasing the risk of a crash
- Harvard applications drop 5% after year of turmoil on the Ivy League campus
- 'Squid Game' without subtitles? Duolingo, Netflix encourage fans to learn Korean
- NFL offseason workout dates: Schedule for OTAs, minicamps of all 32 teams in 2024
Ranking
- Meet the volunteers risking their lives to deliver Christmas gifts to children in Haiti
- Tracy Morgan clarifies his comments on Ozempic weight gain, says he takes it 'every Thursday'
- North Carolina State keeps March Madness run going with defeat of Marquette to reach Elite Eight
- The Moscow concert massacre was a major security blunder. What’s behind that failure?
- Juan Soto praise of Mets' future a tough sight for Yankees, but World Series goal remains
- Gypsy Rose Blanchard and Husband Ryan Anderson Split: Untangling Their Eyebrow-Raising Relationship
- Connecticut will try to do what nobody has done in March Madness: Stop Illinois star Terrence Shannon
- Notre Dame star Hannah Hidalgo rips her forced timeout to remove nose ring
Recommendation
Which apps offer encrypted messaging? How to switch and what to know after feds’ warning
Former NYPD officer acquitted of murder in shooting of childhood friend during confrontation
New image reveals Milky Way's black hole is surrounded by powerful twisted magnetic fields, astronomers say
50 years after the former Yugoslavia protected abortion rights, that legacy is under threat
The FTC says 'gamified' online job scams by WhatsApp and text on the rise. What to know.
The Biden Administration Adds Teeth Back to Endangered Species Act Weakened Under Trump
Powerlifter Angel Flores, like other transgender athletes, tells her story in her own words
Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Mixed Nuts